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Memorable moment from 1980 Daytona 500 ...

Buddy Baker, who won the 1980 Daytona 500, is 6-foot-6, a big guy. He talks about the time he and Tiny Lund took turns sending each other into the wall. Baker took more turns. After the race, Tiny came walking toward Baker. Thing about Tiny is he wasn’t. He was 6-5.

If a young journalist asked me for advice I would say this – before you do a one-on-one or group interview, turn off your cell phone. And if for some reason you have to have it on, then turn it to vibrate.

Twice during a group interview Friday, a reporter’s phone loudly blasted a bad song. Since neither guy was young, I’d offer the same cell phone advice to an old journalist.

The unlikeliest of Daytona 500 winners is Derrike Cope, who won in 1990 when the race leader suffered a cut tire on the last lap. The leader was Dale Earnhardt. So Cope won the race six years before Earnhardt did.

Cope said Friday that he really thought, going in, he had a chance to take the race. His town didn’t. His family was watching the race in Seattle, but the local network preempted the 500 for the Seattle Supersonics NBA game. So the Copes headed south to a hotel where they saw their son win one of the greatest upsets in Daytona history.

Comments

Baker is also a Mecklenburg native from the southwest Steele Creek neck of the woods or at least it was back then, all woods. His youngest sister was tragically killed in 1971 in a car wreck who we went to Olympic with and was a popular senior. We hated that but the Bakers still live down that way as far as we know since you didnt mention this we though we would bring it.